WHILE the security situation has been derailed across the country over
the past decade or so, it is Khyber Pakhtunkhwa that has borne the brunt
of increasing incidents of bombing. Lives are not only lost when
terrorists hit security or civilian targets; even the bomb disposal
squad is at risk when it attempts to defuse an unexploded device. The
latter point was underscored by the death of explosives expert Inspector
Hukam Khan who was killed while defusing an IED device in September.
The incident highlighted the fact that bomb disposal is a potentially
lethal line of work and each attempt at defusing explosives is haunted
by potential tragedy. It is fitting, then, that yesterday`s newspapers
carried photographs of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa police department
initiating the use of robotic systems operated remotely through a
computer interface and capable of defusing explosive devices. Purchased
from the British government, the robotic systems can scan a suspicious
object or vehicleand defuse explosives if present. Equipped with camera
sensors and with the capability to dig up explosives, they can be used
for dealing with IEDs, bombs, parcel bombs and vehicles rigged with
explosives. Indeed, on Monday such a robot was used to defuse a device
in Peshawar`s Nasirpur area.
Police departments all across the
country, particularly in metropolises where bomb attacks are common,
need to be equipped with such technology. The hard fact is that
militants and terrorists are conversant with technology of various kinds
for their grim purposes from cellular communication tools to the
Internet to ever-mutating methods of blowing things up. Worryingly,
however, the country`s law-enforcement agencies, particularly on the
civilian side, continue to operate with archaic methodologies and
insufficient technology. Investing in machines and systems that can help
save lives and avert tragedy is expensive, but the country`s hostile
and worsening climate demands just this.
No comments:
Post a Comment